[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 23 points 3 months ago

They lose in every timeline. The US would have nuked them.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 0 points 5 months ago

How many different subs are you going to repost this to?

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 5 points 6 months ago

I have both. The way Bose handles bluetooth with multiple devices is so awful that I gave up on them and bought the Sony's. They would probably be fine if you only intend to ever pair them to one device. However, for me, I just never figured out what they were trying to do. I'd turn them on and they'd wake up a sleeping iPad in another room, or closed laptop, and then refuse to connect to my phone (using the phone's built in Bluetooth menu) until I opened the Bose App to reconfigure them. The last straw was on video calls for work-- they'd randomly re-connect with a random device.

The Sony's just don't do that. They don't wake up random sleeping or idle devices, and if they do connect to the wrong device I can use the OS Bluetooth menus to manually connect them to a given device -- rather than opening the app in my phone.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 32 points 6 months ago

So cool, thanks. As a kid I spent so much time in DEBUG, stepping through DOS's executables, and especially the Interrupt handlers. It's so neat to see the actual source code-- way easier to read and follow. I didn't know it was all written in assembly, from within Debug it sometimes seemed so messy and convoluted that I just assumed more was written in C.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 11 points 7 months ago

Hedwig. I thought it was such a beautiful movie and about half the people in the theater left.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

Thank you It's easy to say but not so easy to believe. You help.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 16 points 1 year ago

It's not your fault. Tell someone. You'll survive.

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev -2 points 1 year ago

14 life sentences isn't "life in jail" in the UK, where murdering 270 people isn't too much for "compassionate release."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdelbaset_al-Megrahi

[-] SuperNerd@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

It's fine for the usual straightforward and easy problems -- problems that common developer tools and paradigms have solved. Like a product that reduces to CRUD with a few boolean expressions, joins, and simple algebra mixed in. But I think it's inefficient maybe even unworkable for harder problems. And hard can be scale, like moving up two orders of magnitude in throughput or entities, or down in latency. Or hard can be algorithmic stuff.

I highly agree with what others have said here, that a culture of "fungible engineers" can alienate those who want to go deep. Some folks enjoy being subject matter experts or are drawn to a craftsmanship aesthetic. And, IMHO, a healthy org culture should work for all kinds of people -- specialists and generalists. I think you should aim for and encourage people to grow to be T shaped rather than fungible cogs.

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SuperNerd

joined 1 year ago